Sid Nowell Resigning as Bunnell City Attorney After 8 Years as Realignments Continue

Sid Nowell, the city attorney for Bunnell for the past eight years, announced his resignation to top city officials today, citing health issues. Nowell intends to formalize his announcement at the Bunnell City Commission meeting Monday evening.

Commission meetings have lately provided more drama and entertainment than the stage of the nearby Flagler Playhouse.

Nowell, 62, is a partner in the Flagler Beach law firm of Bayer Nowell and McGuire, and it was the whole firm that the city commission hired when it renewed its attorney’s contract in October 2011. The firm is itself resigning its services, Dennis Bayer said, along with Nowell.

“The firm is basically resigning and allowing the city to pick new counsel,” Bayer said. “It has nothing to do with any of the recent headlines or news coming out of the city of Bunnell.”

Bayer added: “It’s a good time for a transition, and we’re certainly going to stick with the city until they find a replacement.”

At the April 22 meeting of the commission, City Commissioner John Rogers moved to fire City Manager Armando Martinez (the motion failed on a 3-2 vote), only to be upstaged by the public resignation of City Clerk Dan Davis, who said he could not work for Martinez anymore. Davis cited an affair that the police chief was allegedly having with the finance director, a case Nowell was involved in, telling the manager that there was nothing he could legally do about it.

The commission has also been convulsed by the latest election in March, which changed the balance of power in favor of Commissioner Elbert Tucker, and away from what had been the slim majority that had retained Nowell in 2011. At the time, Nowell and his firm were hired on a 3-2 vote, with Tucker and Commissioner John Rogers wanting Lonnie Groot as the city attorney. The March election of Bill Baxley, an ally of Tucker, gives Tucker an opening to hire Groot.

“I haven’t changed my mind since the last time,” Tucker said of Groot. “He was the only certified city attorney.” Tucker said he would put Groot’s name forward again.

Politics may be playing a role in Nowell’s decision to resign, but that role may in fact be more minor than other issues—Nowell’s health and other involvements, professional, intellectual and civic, among them.

When Nowell’s firm was hired in October 2011, the firm included—on an of-counsel basis–Jim Manfre, who has since been elected Flagler County Sheriff. Manfre re-hired Nowell as the sheriff’s office’s attorney, just as he had when Manfre was sheriff between 2001 and 2004. The job can be quite demanding on its own.

Manfre and Bayer had both sat in on a few Bunnell City Commission meetings since 2011, and until Manfre’s election, but Bayer’s firm has been rapidly picking up a heavier workload, making its commitment to Bunnell more difficult to sustain, and impossible without Nowell.

The city itself has important issues for the next attorney to negotiate, among them the acquisition of the Plantation Bay utility and issues surrounding the city’s Community Redevelopment Agency (the redevelopment of downtown Bunnell). It is also unlikely that the friction over Martinez’s tenure was terminally set aside at the previous meeting. Martinez, usually prompt with returning calls, did not return a message left on his cell phone Friday evening. A call was not placed to Nowell, who was recovering from minor surgery.

Nowell, a native of the Bronx, moved to Flagler County in 1999 after a long career as an attorney with the U.S. Department of Labor, the National Labor Relations Board, the New York Housing Authority and several years in private practice. In Flagler County, he practiced with what was then the law firm of Chiumento & Guntharp, and at what was then Knight, Dwyer & Nowell, a firm where he worked with Marc Dwyer, who would become a rival in the two men’s contention for a Flagler County Circuit Judge seat in 2010. The seat was won by Dennis Craig. Dwyer has since joined the Chiumento law firm, now Chiumento Selis Dwyer.

After 2004, and before he joined Bayer’s law firm in 2011, Nowell had his own practice, Nowell and Associates, in Bunnell. He is a long-time high school basketball coach (it was on a basketball court, as he was coaching, that he suffered a heart attack two years ago), a volunteer attorney for the NAACP, a board member of the Flagler County Education Foundation and the Flagler Hospital Memorial Foundation, and an assistant professor of legal studies at Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach.

9 Responses for “Sid Nowell Resigning as Bunnell City Attorney After 8 Years as Realignments Continue”

Two down…..more to go. Now get rid of Martinez, Bertha and Hoffman. Time to clean this city up. Let’s start here and in 2014 finish it up! Is the city being sued because Nowell and Martinez blew off Dan Davis?

I am sorry to hear that Sid Nowell is resigning, I thank he is a good Attorney, and that he did his best for the City of Bunnell. My prayer will be with him and his family, and may God bless his good health and let favor in all he does.

Attorney Sid Nowell Great Law Professional, community leader, benefactor, volunteer and supporter and promoter of our arts and education in Flagler County. Glad to see your firm serving our current Sheriff Department.
Excellent example of Sheriff Jim Manfre contracting a local legal firm other than “outsourcing services”. Maybe should be imitated by all our local government departments including schools; to hire, buy and contract local to create much needed jobs in this county, if we want to resolve budget deficits.

I worked with Lonnie Groot when he was attorney for Seminole County. Mr. Groot handled Eminent Domain cases for the county. He always got the job done. Mr. Groot also worked for the City of Palm Coast for awhile. Was never really sure why he left there.

Perhaps Sid is over worked due to all the new lawsuits coming from the dismissal of FCSO prior employees. Though he seems to not be able to handle records requests in a timely manner in accordance with Florida Statues. Another Manfre henchman. Stay tuned for more to come.

I was also fond of Attorney Groot while he was working for City of Palm Coast. His departure was a disappointment to this resident. I will venture and heard on the grapevine also, that was a case of political internal rivalry not Groot’s fault, but that created a terminal “force majeur”. We may never learn the truth.